Zaner Precious Metals Commentary
Monday, January 5, 2026Gold and silver start the week on the bid amid heightened haven interest, soft dollar
OUTSIDE MARKET DEVELOPMENTS: Over the weekend, U.S. forces conducted a daring pre-dawn raid on Venezuela's Fort Tiuna, capturing Nicolas Maduro and his wife. The couple was quickly extracted by helicopter to the USS Iwo Jima in the Caribbean before being flown to New York, where Maduro now faces federal charges, including narcoterrorism.
The UN Security Council held an emergency meeting this morning, at the request of Colombia and Venezuela, with strong backing from Russia and China, who condemned the action as a violation of international law and sovereignty. Russia, China, and some of their allies pushed for condemnation of the U.S. "aggression" and called for Maduro's release. The U.S. defended the raid as justified self-defense against narcoterrorism under Article 51 of the UN Charter. No resolutions were passed, with the U.S poised to exercise its veto power.
Global financial markets reacted with relative calm to events in Venezuela. Oil prices were volatile but remained broadly steady to slightly higher. OPEC met briefly on Sunday and is reportedly maintaining its existing output policy amid an anticipated global oil surplus, rather than making any adjustments for Venezuelan developments.
Venezuela has the largest proven oil reserves in the world, at approximately 303 bln barrels. However, output is dominated by lower-quality, heavier, sour crudes that are more difficult to refine into valuable products like gasoline. That being said, refineries on the U.S. Gulf Coast are capable of processing this grade of oil.
Although there is a fair amount of uncertainty about what happens next, risk appetite has rebounded from recent subdued levels. U.S. stock indices are higher, buoyed by ongoing AI optimism and gains in energy companies on expectations of a Venezuelan oil sector revival. President Trump vowed U.S. oil companies will invest "billions and billions" into the country.
The official VES-USD rate was relatively stable above 300. Information on the more indicative black market rate was sparse, but thought to be around 560. Once the dust settles, the bolívar may garner some strength amid hopes of economic stabilization. Venezuelan government bonds surged as markets priced in hopes of eventual debt restructuring under a U.S.-friendly government, reflecting optimism about unlocking investment despite ongoing political and legal controversies.
Markets will be focused on U.S. labor market data this week. Friday's December nonfarm payrolls report on will be the highlight. Median expectations are +50k. Incoming jobs data may help clarify the policy outlook for the first half of the year.
Manufacturing ISM ebbed to 47.9 in December, below expectations of 48.3, versus 48.2 in November. It was the third straight monthly decline. On the bright side, employment and new orders metrics improved.
GOLD
OVERNIGHT CHANGE THROUGH 6:00 AM CT: +$87.01 (+2.01%)
5-Day Change: +$117.65 (+2.72%)
YTD Range: $4310.83 - $4,455.50
52-Week Range: $2,621.42 - $4,549.77
Weighted Alpha: +65.60
Gold starts the week on the bid, spurred by safe-haven interest in light of weekend events in Venezuela, which arguably raise already high tensions with China and Russia. While the dollar index initially rallied to four-week highs, those gains could not be sustained, and now DXY is lower on the day.
With more than 61.8% of recent corrective losses retraced, considerable confidence has been returned to the underlying uptrend. The next tier of Fibonacci resistance is at $4,491.02 (78.6%). A breach of this level would clear the way for a retest of the $4,549.77 record high.
Additional upside targets are noted at $4,624.44, $4,686.61, and $4,719.43. Further out, the $5,000 objective remains valid, with attainment in Q1 deemed likely.
The rebound off the 20-day moving average provides additional encouragement to the bull camp. While further choppy trading may prevail in the short term, the current range low at $4,275.24 clearly defines risk. Intervening support levels are found at $4,420, $4400.00/$4,396.80, $4,333.91, and $4,310.83.
Keep an eye out this week for signs of additional weakness in the U.S. labor market, as that would increase the likelihood of a Fed rate cut before June. That in turn would keep pressure on the dollar and underpin gold.
Gold is also likely to continue taking its cues from short-term action in silver.
SILVER
OVERNIGHT CHANGE THROUGH 6:00 AM CT: +$1.969 (+2.70%)
5-Day Change: +$4.991 (+6.92%)
YTD Range: $71.429 - $77.153
52-Week Range: $28.565 - $86.637
Weighted Alpha: +188.31
Silver is up more than 5% intraday, garnering revived haven interest, with some help provided by strength in gold and the failure of the greenback to sustain intraday gains. More than 38.2% of the recent retreat has been retraced, boosting confidence that the dominant trend is still very much bullish.
A breach of the midpoint of the recent range at $78.600 would offer further encouragement to the bull camp. The 30-Dec high at $78.046 provides an intervening barrier.
A short-term rebound above $80 would shift focus to retracement levels at $80.496 (61.8%) and $83.197 (78.6%). Penetrations of these levels would clear the way for a challenge of last week's record high at $86.637.
Venezuela is not a significant silver producer due to underinvestment and poor infrastructure. Known reserves would be exploitable with sufficient investment, but that would take years, and at this point, oil seems to be the Trump administration's focus. I don't foresee any meaningful dent in silver's persistent supply deficit.
On the downside, minor intraday support at $75 protects the early U.S. low at $74.613. Below the latter, the Asian low at $72.839 looks to be well protected. The $70.562 level, down to $70.000, looks increasingly like the key short-term level that has to hold.
Peter A. Grant
Vice President, Senior Metals Strategist
Zaner Metals LLC
312-549-9986 Direct/Text
[email protected]
www.zanermetals.com
Non-Reliance and Risk Disclosure: The opinions expressed here are for general information purposes only and should not be construed as trade recommendations, nor a solicitation of an offer to buy or sell any precious metals product. The material presented is based on information that we consider reliable, but we do not represent that it is accurate, complete, and/or up-to-date, and it should not be relied on as such. Opinions expressed are current as of the time of posting and only represent the views of the author and not those of Zaner Metals LLC unless otherwise expressly noted.












